Issues Raised by Provisions Directing Issuance of Official or Diplomatic Passports

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedJanuary 17, 1992
StatusPublished

This text of Issues Raised by Provisions Directing Issuance of Official or Diplomatic Passports (Issues Raised by Provisions Directing Issuance of Official or Diplomatic Passports) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Issues Raised by Provisions Directing Issuance of Official or Diplomatic Passports, (olc 1992).

Opinion

Issues Raised by Provisions Directing Issuance of Official or Diplomatic Passports

S ectio n 129(e) o f Pub. L. No. 102-138 an d section 503 o f Pub. L . No. 102-140 are unconstitu­ tio n al to th e ex ten t th at they purport to lim it the P resident’s ability to issue m ore than one o fficial o r d ip lo m atic passport to U n ited S tates governm ent personnel.

T h e sin g le-p assp o rt requirem ents set fo rth in section 129(e) and section 503 are severable from th e re m a in d e r o f the statutes in w hich they appear.

T h e P re sid en t is co n stitutionally authorized to decline to enforce the portions o f section 129(e) an d sectio n 503 th at purport to lim it the issuance o f official and diplom atic passports.

January 17, 1992

M em orandum O p in io n f o r t h e C ou n sel to the P r e s id e n t

This memorandum responds to your request for our opinion on several issues raised by the nearly identical provisions of section 129(e) of the For­ eign Relations Authorization A ct for Fiscal Years 1992 and 1993, Pub. L. No. 102-138, 105 Stat. 647, 662 (1991), and section 503 of Departments of Commerce, Justice and State, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies Appro­ priations Act, 1992, Pub. L. No. 102-140, 105 Stat. 782, 820 (1991), an act making appropriations for the State Department and other agencies. Spe­ cifically, you asked whether these provisions are unconstitutional to the extent that they purport to prohibit the issuance of more than one official or diplo­ m atic passport to United States government officials, whether they are severable from the remainder o f the two bills, and whether the President may decline to enforce them.1 For the reasons explained below, we con­ clude that the relevant portions of section 129(e) and section 503 are unconstitutional to the extent that they limit the issuance o f official and diplomatic passports and that those sections are severable from the remainder of the two statutes. Under the circumstances, we further conclude that the Presi­ dent is constitutionally authorized to decline to enforce these provisions.

'M em orandum for Timothy E. Flanigan, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, from C. Boyden Gray, Counsel to the President (Oct. 23, 1991) (“Opinion Request” ).

18 I.

Section 129 of Pub. L. No. 102-138 provides in part:

(e)(1) REQUIREMENT OF SINGLE PASSPORT. — The Secretary of State shall not issue more than one official or diplomatic passport to any official of the United States Gov­ ernment for the purpose of enabling that official to acquiesce in or comply with the policy of the majority of [the] Arab League nations of rejecting passports of, or denying entrance visas to, persons whose passport or other documents reflects that the person has visited Israel.

(2) IMPLEMENTATION OF POLICY OF NONCOMPLI­ ANCE.— The Secretary of State shall promulgate such rules and regulations as are necessary to ensure that officials of the United States Government do not comply with, or acquiesce in, the policy of the majority of Arab League nations o f re­ jecting passports of, or denying entrance visas to, persons whose passport or other documents reflect that the person has visited Israel.2 The relevant portion of section 503 of Pub. L. No. 102-140 is nearly identical: [Ninety] days after the enactment of this Act, none of the funds provided in this Act shall be used by the Department of State to issue more than one official or diplomatic passport to any United States Government employee for the purpose of enabling that employee to acquiesce in or comply with the policy of the majority of Arab league nations of rejecting pass­ ports of, or denying entrance visas to, persons whose passports or other documents reflect that that person has visited Israel.3

2 105 Stat. at 662. By virtue of section 129(e)(3)(A), section 129(e) is effective January 26, 1992. Because you have requested our opinion only as to those provisions that “purport to forbid the issu­ ance o f more than one official or diplomatic passport to U.S. officials for the purpose o f enabling those officials to acquiesce in” the Arab League policy described in section 129, we have so lim ited our review and will for ease o f reference refer to the operative portion of section 129, section 129(e). See Opinion Request. We note, however, that section 129 also prohibits issuance o f “any passport that is designated for travel only to Israel.” Pub. L. No. 102-138, § 129(d)(1), 105 Stat. at 661. To the extent that this prohibition applies to official and diplomatic passports, it suffers from the same constitutional defects as the prohibition on multiple passports. 1 105 Stat. at 820. Like section 129 of Pub. L. No. 102-138, section 503 also prohibits the issuance of Israel-only passports: “None of the funds provided in this Act shall be used by the Departm ent o f State to issue any passport that is designated for travel only to Isra e l. . . . ” Id. O ur discussion of section 503 is limited to the provision that forbids the issuance of more than one official or diplomatic passport to U nited States government officials. See supra note 2. References to section 503 in this m emorandum should be understood to be so limited.

19 These provisions purport to effect a change in the State Department’s current practice in issuing official and diplomatic passports to government personnel sent to the Middle East, which is described in the conference report on Pub. L. No. 102-138: “Officials o f the U.S. Government traveling in the Middle East are, as a general practice, issued two passports so that they can travel to Israel and to Arab countries in compliance with the pass­ port and visa policy of the majority of Arab League nations.” H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 238, 102d Cong., 1st Sess. 107 (1991). You have asked our opinion whether legislation banning continuation o f this practice is unconstitutional. The State Department has concluded that section 129(e) and section 503 would unconstitutionally intrude on the President’s authority to conduct di­ plomacy on behalf o f the United States.4 In the State Department’s view, these provisions would “directly interfere with the President’s ability to send his diplomats abroad to negotiate with foreign governments,” id. at 7, and “interfere with the discretion and flexibility needed by the President to carry out the exclusively executive function of foreign diplomacy,” id. at 12.5 Ac­ co rd in g ly , the State D epartm ent concludes that these provisions are unconstitutional. Id. at 14. As part o f its analysis, the State Department “examined a variety o f pos­ sibilities for carrying out diplomatic functions without the issuance of more than one official or diplomatic passport,” but it was “unable to identify a satisfactory alternative in a significant number of cases that would be af­ fected by this legislation.” Id. at 5. These alternatives included: (1) “travelling to either Israel or Arab League nations without presenting a passport;” (2) “ask[ing] Israel not to stamp the passports of U.S. officials;” (3) “seekfing] advance permission from the receiving Arab country every time a U.S. offi­ cial would be entering that country with a passport reflecting travel to Israel;” (4) “cancelling a diplomatic or official passport that reflected travel to Israel whenever the holder needed to travel to an Arab League nation, and reissuing a new passport;” and (5) “arranging negotiations so that travel to Israel fol­ lowed travel to the Arab countries.” Id. at 5-6. The State Department rejected all o f these alternatives.6 After reviewing these options, it concluded:

4 Memorandum for Timothy E. Flanigan, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, from Jamison M. Selby, Deputy Legal Advisei, Department of State (Jan. 3,1992) ("Selby Memorandum").

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